Tag: on balance volume

  • Smart Money Is Quietly Exiting This Name

    Smart Money Is Quietly Exiting This Name

    There’s been a marked shift developing beneath the surface in parts of the services and software space, particularly among companies tied to employment trends. The tape has been very unforgiving toward businesses that rely on steady labor expansion, as hiring momentum has flattened out and forward expectations have cooled. What’s notable is how quickly investors have rotated away from these names, even as broader indices attempt to stabilize. It’s not outright panic—more a quiet repricing of growth assumptions tied to the labor cycle.

    One name that surfaced in today’s review is Paychex (PAYX). The backdrop is challenging: a stalled “no hire, no fire” labor environment now showing early signs of contraction, paired with longer-term concerns around AI-driven disruption in payroll and HR services. Price has reflected that pressure, carving out a steady sequence of lower highs and lower lows since its June peak, with little evidence of sustained buying interest. More telling is the OBV line, which has continued to drift lower throughout the decline and barely responded during recent rallies—suggesting institutions have yet to step in with conviction.

    From a trade construction standpoint, this type of orderly downtrend lends itself to defined-risk bearish positioning, particularly through put options. Rather than trying to time an exact top or bottom, the focus shifts to participating in continuation while clearly defining downside exposure. In this case, a put structure offers asymmetry—if the stock were to decline by roughly 10% into expiration, the option setup could translate to a gain in the neighborhood of 88.9%, though outcomes will ultimately depend on timing, volatility, and price path. It’s less about prediction and more about aligning risk with a prevailing trend that hasn’t yet shown signs of reversal.

    If you find yourself drawn to setups where the technicals and macro narrative are aligned like this, it may be worth exploring my Option Edge Newsletter. For ONLY $1 in your first month, you’ll get a detailed breakdown of my top trade idea each week—including the exact structure and reasoning behind the trade. It’s a straightforward way to stay connected to actionable ideas without overcomplicating the process. Click here to get signed up today!

    Wishing You the Best in Investing Success,

    Paycheck's OBV line confirms the bearish trend for the stock.

    Blane Markham

    Chief Trading Strategist

    Have any questions? Email us at support@markhamtrading.com

    *Trading incurs risk and some people lose money trading.

  • Under The Radar A.I. Play Pops

    Under The Radar A.I. Play Pops

    Market leadership continues to show up in places many traders ignored during last year’s mega cap dominated tape. Capital has decisively rotated back into infrastructure-style names tied to the A.I. economy, and the tape has started to reward that patience. Several key charts in the group are now reclaiming trend structure that had been absent for most of 2025. When accumulation returns to these kinds of assets, the price action often becomes far more orderly than the broader market.

    One name that recently pushed its way onto the radar is Digital Realty Trust, Inc. (DLR). After spending much of 2025 trading quietly and even sliding into year-end, the stock has started this year with notable strength and recently broke out to fresh 52-week highs. Just as important, shares have reclaimed all of their major moving averages, restoring structural support beneath the trend. Meanwhile the On-Balance Volume line has been climbing steadily since the December lows, a sign that larger investors have been accumulating shares and helping reinforce the bullish tape.

    With the stock approaching the $200 level, outright call options can become expensive—particularly in a market where volatility keeps time premium elevated. Rather than chase premium, a defined-risk approach such as an in-the-money call option debit spread can allow participation in continued upside while reducing upfront cost. One spread currently available offers roughly a 51.5% potential return if DLR is up, flat, or even down by as much as 10% by expiration, illustrating how a carefully structured options position can create a more forgiving payoff profile around a strong trend. In other words, the trade isn’t dependent on a runaway move — it simply requires the broader structure to remain intact.

    For readers who enjoy how we break down charts and turn them into actionable trade structures, our Options Edge Newsletter shows exactly how our team approaches these opportunities each week. Every edition highlights multiple setups we’re tracking and the precise strategies we’d consider trading. Right now, you can access the first four weeks for just $1, giving you a full look at how we translate market observations into real trade ideas. Don’t wait, kickoff your trial period today!

    Wishing You the Best in Investing Success,

    Blane Markham

    Chief Trading Strategist

    Have any questions? Email us at support@markhamtrading.com

    *Trading incurs risk and some people lose money trading.